Film Review
The therapy culture, an emerging phenomenon in France in the late
1970s, is a subject which is ripe for satire, and Philipe de Broca's
riotous comedy
Psy taps into
this rich vein like a hungry Velociraptor gorging on its midday
snack. The film was based on an adult strip cartoon (by the great
Gérard Lauzier) and this shows in the blatant character
stereotypes and slightly lunatic plot. Despite its obvious lack
of subtlety, the film makes an effective satire and is arguably one of
the most successful of de Broca's comedies, far more palatable than his
more overblown comic escapades with Jean-Paul Belmondo.
Psy feels oddly like a Woody Allen
remake of the director's earlier comedy
Le Diable par la queue (1969),
a quintessentially Gallic sex comedy that goes completely off the rails
and ends up as a bizarre kind of psychodrama, one that potently
reflects the mood of post-May 1968 disillusionment in France of the
late '70s. Patrick Dewaere heads a distinguished cast that
includes Anny Duperey, Jean-François Stévenin and two
young, indescribably cute young actors right at the start of their
illustrious careers, Catherine Frot and Jean-Pierre Darroussin.
Perhaps the most notable thing about
Psy
is that it offered Patrick Dewaere one of his few (and arguably finest)
comedy roles. Dewaere is best known for his dramatic portrayals of
sympathetic outsiders in such films as
Les
Valseuses (1974) and
Série noire (1979), but
in
Psy he is given the
opportunity to let rip and play one his familiar tragic characters from
a mainly comical angle. Dewaere's portrayal of a man teetering on
the edge of a nervous breakdown is authentic but it is also grotesque
and our reaction to his inescapable descent into Hell is naturally one
of amusement. The central joke of the film is that the man
running the psychotherapy course (Dewaere) does so mainly for
therapeutic reasons, since he himself is a manic depressive with
obvious psychopathic tendencies. In the light of subsequent
real-life events (Dewaere would lose the woman nearest to him to his
best friend and would then seek solace with a gun) the film acquires
something of a much darker hue. Dewaere was never afraid to draw
on his own experiences - this is what made him such a great actor - but
towards the end of his career he found it hard to distinguish real life
from fantasy.
Psy, one
of Patrick Dewaere's last films, perhaps reveals more about the actor
than he intended, and it leaves us wondering just why it is we are able
to see humour in the personal tragedies of others.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Philippe de Broca film:
L'Africain (1983)
Film Synopsis
Where now are the ideals of May '68? This is a question that Marc,
a man in his mid-thirties and former soixante-huitard, might have cause to
ruminate on as he profits from bourgeois angst by running weekend psychotherapy
courses at a large house in the country belonging to his partner Colette.
Marc's clients are a predictable mix of monomaniac depressives and social
inadequates, all desperately seeking release from their neuroses and inhibitions.
Marc understands their condition all too well, having once been a chronic
depressive himself. The only reason he started giving courses was so
that he could scrape together enough money to fulfil his great dream of a
tour of Africa. His boldly coloured Land Rover is a symbol of both
Marc's failed political illusions and his frantic desire to escape.
Blissfully unaware of the traumas that even now are galloping towards him,
Marc embarks on his latest mind-healing course with his usual forced equanimity.
He has a promising group of attendees this time - Sibylle, Michel, Félix,
Babette, Jacques and Jérôme shouldn't present him with any problems.
In fact, it should be quite an uneventful weekend. Then Marc receives
a bolt from the blue. His ex-girlfriend Marléne rings him up
with the news that she has just robbed a bank with her latest partner, Jo,
and desperately needs a place to hide. Now Marc hasn't seen Marléne
for ten years, and when she walked out on him she took with her his best
friend, Bob, and just about everything else he possessed. So, understandably,
he is not particularly over-keen to renew their acquaintance - even if she
has killed a policeman.
As it turns out, Marc finds he has no choice in the matter. Marléne
and Bob show up and instantly set about wrecking his ordered world as they
await the appearance of Jo. Aware that Colette is allowing herself
to be seduced by Bob, Marc begins to go off the rails, his former psychological
problems reasserting themselves with a vengeance. As he goes to pieces,
his clients find the alternative shock therapy offered by Bob and Jo to be
far more effective in resolving their own problems. Eventually, the
weekend from Hell proves to be an unqualified success for everyone - even
Marc, who now has the confidence he needs to fulfil his one great ambition,
in the company of his faithful Colette.
© James Travers
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